Brothers and sisters,
Jesus once warned us very clearly:
“When you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the pagans do, for they think they will be heard because of their many words.”
And yet, in another place, he tells us to pray persistently — to knock, to ask, to seek, and not to give up.
At first, this sounds like a contradiction.
And because of this confusion, something strange has happened: many Christians now pray exactly like pagans, only with Christian vocabulary. We repeat more. We intensify more. We count more. We compete more. And we call this “persistence.”
But Jesus never meant that.
The difference is not how long we pray —
the difference is what we are praying for.
When Jesus Christ gave us the model prayer, he did not give us a technique. He gave us a reorientation of desire. Every line of that prayer pulls us away from what is attractive, impressive, or consumable — and toward what actually sustains life.
Take the line: “Give us this day our daily bread.”
We almost always hear this as a prayer for physical food. And yes — God knows we need food. Jesus himself tells us that the Father already knows what we need before we ask.
But Jesus lived on another kind of bread.
In the wilderness, he ate nothing for forty days.
In the villages, he poured himself out for the crowds while neglecting his own rest.
He said plainly: “My food is to do the will of the One who sent me.”
This bread is real nourishment — but it is not tasty.
It is not comforting.
It does not flatter the body or the ego.
And this is the bread we quietly replace.
We pray for what is easy to swallow, not for what sustains us.
We pray for comfort, success, relief — but hesitate to pray for endurance, obedience, or transformation. Yet this is the bread Jesus teaches us to ask for.
The same distortion happens with mercy.
Pagans — and often Christians — believe mercy is obtained by pleading harder, sacrificing more, or proving our seriousness. But notice how the model prayer works: “Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us.”
The prayer is balanced.
You cannot ask for mercy without committing to become merciful.
True sacrifice is not how much you give up for God —
it is how much forgiveness you extend to others.
And then comes the most uncomfortable request of all:
“Lead us not into temptation.”
This is not only about avoiding sin. It is about avoiding spiritual pride — the temptation to judge, to compare, to see ourselves as superior. Jesus paints this scene vividly: the Pharisee standing confidently, listing his religious achievements, while the tax collector stands at a distance, unable even to lift his eyes.
Religious competition is always pagan at heart.
Who prays more?
Who fasts more?
Who sacrifices more?
This is not the Kingdom of God.
Let me put it simply with an image.
Imagine a mother going to the supermarket. She knows exactly what her child needs — and she plans to bring it. But the child does not trust her. Instead, the child floods her phone with messages:
Candy. Sugar. Candy. Sugar. Again. Again. Again.
Not once does the child say:
“Please bring the food I don’t like — the food that will keep me healthy.”
God knows we need perishable bread.
But what delights him is when we ask, freely and knowingly, for the better food.
This is what Jesus means by persistence.
Not repeating words endlessly.
Not reciting prayers mechanically.
But persistently asking for the same difficult things:
- the bread that does not flatter us
- the mercy that obligates us
- the humility that restrains our pride
To pray this way is hard.
It goes against instinct.
It reshapes desire rather than indulging it.
The Lord’s Prayer is not a chant to be multiplied.
It is a pattern to be absorbed — until it runs in the blood.
So let us not pray more like pagans.
Let us pray more like children who trust their Father.
And let us persist — not in quantity —
but in truth.
Amen.